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The Hanging Tree (standard:other, 3611 words) | |||
Author: anonymous | Added: Apr 22 2009 | Views/Reads: 3283/1986 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
An aging southern gentleman enthralls two college students with tales of his town's past. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story end up as just one big cut instead of a young man, smilin' as she attached yet another bandage to my shin or elbow. All part of bein' a little boy, though...anyhow, if you look just to the left of that bump, about an inch or so...can you see it? That smooth spot that looks as if the bark was rubbed off? It's just a little more than the width of a line of rope, isn't it? I remember seein' that for the first time when I was just seven or eight years old, wonderin' if that spot was due to some tree disease or somethin'. But it wasn't; no, sir, it sure wasn't. The first person ever hanged in our famous and historic tree was Oliver Joseph McCorkindale, a Nigerian slave owned by Nestor McCorkindale, who owned a cotton plantation just south of where our town now stands. Seems Oliver, had been accused of havin' "improper relations" with Nestor's young niece, Elizabeth Ward. Local legend has it that Miss Ward, unusually mature for her age, had been the initiator of the impro-priety and had later disgraced the family by runnin' off to New York City, (is that near Syracuse?) where she took up with a known profligate and gambler by the name of Sneed, who eventually tired of her and put her to work as a prostitute. If you go to the town hall, (it's that big brick buildin' in front of you) and climb the old wooden stairs to the second floor, you'll find the Registrar and Records office on the right. The second drawer of the oak filin' cabinet holds a folder marked, "Town Deaths." In there is a journal of sorts; it is old but not unclean, and contains accurate recordin's of every person ever hanged or lynched in Maple Grove. The original keeper of this book was Miss Violeta Harper, Maple Grove's first spinster woman; and let me tell you, she kept incredibly accurate records from May of seventeen-ninety-three until her death in eighteen-and-twenty-two. The handwritin' changed after that and the recordin's became a tad less detailed. Two or three years after Miss Violeta passed, a Mr. Johnston Hazzard took over the scribin' duties and, while he was no Miss Violeta, he was, how do you kids put it these days? Anal retentive? Well, he was that. Mr. Hazzard recorded the hangin' of every man condemned by the Town courts and every man to be dragged from his cell or bed in the middle of the night. He did this for twenty-three years until someone accused him (rightly, as it turned out) of bein' a homosexual pedophile. Seems Johnston was an avid student of the ancient Greeks and figured it was his responsibility to follow their example. He was dragged from his office on an unseasonably warm day in November of eighteen-and-forty-seven, beaten by various townfolk, and strung up. His death was read and reread at many breakfast tables the next morning, having made the front page of the Bugle, complete with an artist's rendering. All told, at the time of Hazzard's death, there had been one hundred and two hangings in our town square. What's that? Oh. Ummm...no, I don't think so...I have been through the journal several times in the last twenty years and I don't seem to recall readin' about any women who had actually been hanged in the tree; but there was one story, more of a legend, really. Now, the story I heard supposedly happened in nineteen-and-thirty-seven and regarded an old country woman, name of...let's see, name of Cavanaugh. She was also the only local person ever to be accused of practicin' the voodoo religion, somethin' you Yankees might call witchcraft. Anyway, the rumor that circulated was to the effect she had been chantin' spells at all hours and this activity was somehow related to the semi-mysterious deaths of four local boys who were known to cruelly tease the widow Cavanaugh whenever she came into town. As the story went, one of these boys' fathers was the brother of Reverend Granger; I believe I mentioned him before. The good Reverend was extremely upset by his family's loss and, after a night of attempting to cure his grief with "medicinal" brandy, ascended his pulpit with bloodshot eyes and a pale face. He proceeded to recount the events of the past few days, as well as the unsubstantiated rumors about the widow Cavanaugh, and whipped his parishioners into a frenzy. As I heard it, they didn't even wait for the benediction, stormin' en masse out of the chapel in the general direction of the Cavanaugh house on the outskirts of the county. They were stopped by the local constabulary about fifteen minutes later and sent home. Reverend Grainger was paid a visit later that day by Sheriff Brady, who advised the preacher that, while the Catholics had successfully achieved a balance between alcohol and religion, he was in fact a Methodist and should consider abstinence. The Civil Rights Act was passed in nineteen-and-sixty-four, effectively outlawin' the practice of lynchin'. Of course, it had always been a crime to hang a person without due process; this was covered under the statutes against murder, kidnapin', torture and a variety of locally enforceable offenses. But our grand juries refused to indict, our trial juries were all-white and often staffed by relatives of the accused, and jury nullification had become somethin' you could win cash money on. Those were bad times. Even though agents of both the FBI and HUAC made their collective presences known to the entire county, there was, simply, just too much county to cover, and societal trespassers (as well as the entire black population) hid like mice. It was durin' this time that local chapters of the Klan were most active. Midnight rides, used mostly as a tool to terrify the African shanty towns, were commonplace. Blacks were rarely seen out after dark, but were taken from their homes, from the arms of their loved ones by men whose hatred was fueled by rumor and drink; men who claimed devoutness of faith and cleanliness of character on Sunday but practiced the most un-Christian of activities the rest of the week. Hoods on their heads, hoods on the heads of their horses...my goodness. Perhaps these hoods were to show some kinship with the animal kingdom, perhaps they were secretly aware what they were doing was wrong...perhaps it was a uniformity they were attempting to express. Whatever the motivation, most who can claim membership in the human race thought the Klan to be populated by abject cowards; black of heart and yellow of spine, undereducated thugs who would rather hate than evolve. This was an attitude that got some of us into trouble; no one wanted the boat rocked...and it was almost impossible to stop the Klan. I myself received a couple death threats and once even had a small cross burned on my front lawn. Wish I could say it was an anonymous warning, but the perpetrator was my childhood friend, Joey McManus. He spit in my face during a subsequent public meeting and labeled me with a vile epithet that does not bear repeatin'. Eventually, however, this all ended. The Klan has retreated to the background of public life; one hears about them from time to time, but the active membership has been reduced to a few old-timers from out near the swampier regions of the state. Old dogs can still bark, I guess, but you'd be in more danger of bein' slobbered on than actually bitten. And slobber always comes out in the wash...always. But it wasn't until nineteen-and-sixty-eight, a full four years after the Civil Rights Act, that Maple Grove passed a law that specifically codified the act of lynchin'. There was no parade, no fanfare; no black leaders from the NAACP or the Nation of Islam spoke in town square. Matter of fact, there wasn't even any pressure brought to bear on our local government. As I recall, someone just put it on the ballot that year, perhaps just snuck it in there, and it passed by a comfortable margin. We had two newspapers by then; the Bugle had long since graduated to a daily from a thrice-a-weeker, and the M. Grove Weekly, but neither paper did a story on the event; it was just one of the election results. The last recorder for the town of Maple Grove is still alive; still lives here in town. He grew up in the third house on the right; no, across the street, and came of age near the day he witnessed his first hangin'...I meant to say lynchin'; that man was lynched. He was a nineteen-year-old black youth accused of rapin' three young white girls, one of whom was my sister. She died. That day...I shall always remember that day; Lord God, how I wanted to join in the beatin' and hangin and burnin' of that...young man. I saw him, trussed as one would a side of beef for the spit, except he was alive; my sister wasn't. His eyes expressed a wild terror and he was screamin'; screamin' through the gasoline-soaked rag in his mouth, screamin' for someone to come from somewhere: screamin' for a miracle. None came. He was doused in kerosene, cut open with a knife, stoned, shot and set afire and, although I took absolutely no part in this, I did nothing to stop it. I was not horrified; I just watched ...and remembered. I recorded these events in the town journal...you can read it if you like, but it does not make for a pleasant tale. What wasn't reported in the journal, or in either of the town's two papers, is that the victim of this lynchin' was an innocent man. See, the other two girls survived. It was they who had pointed to the African, they who had told their parents of the gross violation of their honor, they who had inflamed the rage of the townspeople; they who had actually com-mitted the rape and murder of my sister. It wasn't until years later, when they were both middle-aged matrons, that the truth came forth. They were cousins, both from respectable families of unquestioned morality and honor and, although it was not well-known, were practicing lesbians. They had both fallen in lust with my sister and had made attempts to engage the younger girl in congress, somethin' she refused to even consider. Perhaps that was all it took...`Hell hath no fury...' and all that. My sister was attacked on the way home from church, knocked unconscious and dragged into a small barn. The cousins, in the act of stealing her innocence, killed the child by causing severe internal bleeding. Realizin' their crime, they swore a pact and concocted a story to cover themselves. No one questioned their story and their hysteria was convincin' enough to, along with their family names, deflect any medical curiosity. The cousins kept their secret up until fifteen years ago. The older woman, diagnosed with a particularly nasty form of lymphocytic leukemia, confessed the truth to her husband while on her deathbed. He called the police. Then he called me. Both women were charged with kidnapin', rape and first-degree murder. The sick one died two weeks later; the other woman narrowly (and I do mean narrowly) escaped a very horrible death at my hands. I was on my way out the door with several selections from my knife collection when confronted by Martin Culhane, our chief of police. After a short struggle, I was taken into custody and jailed for three months, until the trial was over. Chief Culhane knew I was after blood; not just to avenge my long-dead sister, but also to avenge the death of the wrong man. Her blood...to pay for his, the blood that was spilled in my sight and burned in town square; the first blood I recorded in the journal. Innocent blood. If lynchin' were still permitted at the time of her conviction, (and had I not been in jail) I would have recorded her blood as well. She was jailed for fifty years; I've been to all three of her parole hearin's. I don't go to intimidate her or to argue for continued incarceration on behalf of either victim in this case: I go to make it very clear to the parole board that she stay in jail for her own well-bein'; that I will end her life the second she sets foot on free ground. So far, they have listened to me. I only hope that one day they don't. I recorded my last public hangin' on May twenty-seventh, nineteen seventy-five. It was not a lynchin'; as I said earlier, that had been outlawed in the local elections seven years before. This was a sanctioned execution, ordered by a jury of peers after twelve days of deliberation on the case of People v. Craddock, in which one Mark Craddock had been tried and convicted of the slaying of his wife, Maria. It was, by all accounts, just another trial; the only reason it stands out in the memories of the townspeople is that it was the last hangin' in Maple Grove. Ever. That was the year the citizenry repealed capital punishment. Oh, there were some in our commu-nity, mostly law and order types (including Chief Culhane) who fought against the measure, but a ninety-seven percent mandate speaks for the entire town and ignores the dissentin' minority. To his credit, the Chief has never again voiced his opposition; he just let it stand...as a good public servant ought. The people of Maple Grove remain as genteel as is expected of most Souther-ners; rebels is what your Yankee forbears would call us. Not that we ever cared. In later years, of course, that changed to rednecks, good ol' boys, white trash, (I always detested that one) inbred; as if any of these labels, or the racial attitudes associated with them, are restricted to those livin' below a certain latitude. You know, one of the truest statements I ever read was on a bumper sticker: ‘The only difference between rednecks and assholes is the Chesapeake Bay.' That's just a fancy way of sayin' that racism isn't restricted to the South; I've sure read about plenty of it up North...did you say you were from up that way? Whereabouts? Oh yes, Syracuse. The specter of our past is all but gone now... except for the tree. It stands as a reminder, perhaps; to some it is an historic symbol, now over three hundred years old. To others, it is ignored as an embarrassment. It was those folks, mostly the younger citizens of our town, who started a movement to have the tree cut down, sold for firewood, and donate the proceeds to a ‘reparations fund' for the local African community. They gained the tacit support of the ACLU and the full support of the radical Islamic Constituency from nearby Plymouth, but the measure was defeated in a special election. So the tree stands. It is fenced off with six-foot-high wrought iron. Video surveillance was installed three years ago to guard against vandals or those who have an undyin' need to make some sort of social or political statement. There is a plaque that stands at the south end of the fence. It's near the sidewalk and faces the street. The plaque was put there by the Martin Luther King, Jr. Foundation and is a marker on ‘The Civil Rights Trail'. It says, ‘This tree, approximately two hun-dred ninety-six years old at the time of this dedication, was used for public execution between 1793 and 1975. According to local records, over one hundred seventy hangings were acknowledged to have taken place on this spot. One hundred thirty-three of these executions were performed without due process of law. All but two of those victims were of African descent." Underneath this statement is one line: "Hatred is a learned response." And now you stand here on this beautiful bright day, askin' questions designed to help you discover whether the South has changed; to determine whether racial hatred still bubbles as hot pitch, hidden beneath the surface of our society, or to see if we are properly penitent, consumed by ‘white guilt' or some other social malady. We are neither. We are not cowed nor proud, we are not borderline Klan or apologists for the Confederacy. We do not wish for a return to slavery or to punitively pay for the actions of our ancestors: It is simply our history. These lives have been lived, these events have taken place and cannot be changed...only learned from. Our children will bear witness to the lessons and pass them on. As will yours. This is somethin' I think we can all live with. Drive safe, now. You've got a long trip back...where did you say you're from? Syracuse, was it? fin Tweet
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